Slownik Geograficzny
published 1884; page 375
Translated from Polish by Lawrence
Krupnak,
East Europe Connection
I. LUBAR - small town,
county of Volhynian Novgorod, on Słucz River, in
the most fertile region of Volhynia, has 6,902
residents and 1,657 farmers who own 2,343
"dziesięcinas" of land. (1) Established between
1340 and 1382 by Prince Lubart Gedyminowicz, and
for that reason, for a long time, it was called
Lubartów. Kochowski (3) said about this that
"Lubarum seu Lubartovia, primo conditori nomen
debet a Lubarto conditum" (3). Subsequently,
Lubar was included within the crown estates and
given as a reward for service to the princely
House of Lubomirski; from them it passed to the
Walewski Family, and presently belongs to
Countess Wodzicka nee Karwicka. Even today,
Lubar bears the signs of its past splendor.
Post-Basilian walls of the friars’ monastery and
the church, which up to 1833 housed once famous
schools, second best in Volhynia after the
Piarists of Międzyrzecze, today converted into
an Orthodox monastery. There remains only a
tradition and memories in the chronicles, for
presently not even a trace remains of that
fortified castle founded in the XIV Century by
Prince Lubart; which, nevertheless, must have
been fortified adequately to survive the Cossack
wars of the XVII Century and to withstand the
siege of 1651; whatever befell it later, nothing
is known. The greatest attraction of Lubar even
today is the parish church, initially of the
Dominican Friars, in a Romanesque style, founded
by Prince Stanisław Lubomirski in the XVIII
century, rebuilt in stone and consecrated by the
Kiev and Chernihov Bishop Załuski in 1765, as
the Church of Saint Michael and Saint Jan
Nepomucen. In the church is a picture of Christ,
famous for miracles, brought to Lubar from
Hryniowce (county Zasławiec) in 1754 by Bishop
Kajetan Sołtyka. It appears that within this
church or monastery there existed once a greater
picture gallery, because even today many more
paintings can be seen; there are many portraits
of various bishops of Chełm, Płock, Łuck; even
Poznań, Kraków, Lwów; and from Lithuania;
paintings of five popes, many scenes from the
Holy Bible and other, symbolic ones; a group of
seven pictures, depicting scenes of martyrdom
inflicted by the Tartars, particularly attracts
attention. Remnants of an obviously once
splendid library favorably witness to the
intellectual life of the Dominican monks. A
small palace of the owners of the estate, in an
Italian style, built next to the river on a high
ground, ads significant splendor to Lubar;
similarly to be noted is one of the larger
houses in town, that at one time belonged to
Countess Ponińska. Today, Lubar does not have
any factories, except for the Łuczycki Organ and
Music Box Works, the Jakubowicz Carriage
Workshop, an attractive flour mill on the Słucz
River, and a brewery; tradition has it, however,
that at one time there were here a cloth
manufacture, a hat factory, a wineshop, a book
store, that survived until 1855, a printing shop
run by the church, public baths with showers and
the famous spring waters of the Basilian Friars,
which, from the healing point of view,
adequately offered the Volhynian region an
alternative to other fashionable “spas,” and,
during the bathing season, drew to Lubar large
crowds of visitors. This estate comprises 6,243
ares of land, of which 5,675 ares belong to the
Count Wodzicki Family, while other small owners
control 568 ares. Lubar has a police post and is
the county seat, has a post office, a doctor and
an apothecary. Moreover, a peace judge and a
peace mediator live here. The Lubar Catholic
parish of the Żytomir Diocese has 2,172 souls,
an auxiliary church in Wolica Wielka (previously
also in Nowa Czartoryja), chapels in Pedyńki,
Motowidłówka, Wyszczykusy (previously also in
Wygnanka and Seweryny). In 1870, Lubar had 4,922
residents, of whom 54 per cent were Israelites,
893 houses, 8 Orthodox churches, an Eastern
Orthodox convent, a church, a synagogue, 6
houses of prayer, 3 tanneries, a brewery, 116
stores, 90 artisans and three trade fairs. See
the article about Lubar by Komaszko in the
“Vohlynian Province News” 1862.
L. R.
Translator's Footnotes
1. pronounced
“dje-shen-chi-nah” - a Russian provincial
measure of area (‘diesiatina’); one diesiatina
equals 109.45 ares, or 100 square meters
(approximately 0.025 acre).
2.
a writer and historian of the 17th Century.
3. a passage in Latin
which means “whether Lubar or Lubartów, it owes
its name to the name of its first founder,
Lubart”].
4. verst, a Russian
unit of distance; one verst = 0.6629 mile (1.067
kilometers)].
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